20 App. D.C. 543 | D.C. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an action to recover damages for an injury to the person of the plaintiff, caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant, while the plaintiff, a passenger, was alighting from one of the defendant’s street cars in the city of Washington. The injury complained of consisted of the fracture of one of the thigh-hones of the plaintiff, and other injuries and braises of her body. At the time of the accident the car was bound east ón 0 street, near the intersection of Eleventh street, N. E.
At the trial, the defendant sought by prayer to have the case taken from the jury, upon the ground that the evidence did not warrant a verdict for the plaintiff. This effort was based upon the ground of the supposed want of sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant in producing the injury, and because, as contended, the injury complained of was produced by the negligent act of the plaintiff herself. The court refused to withdraw the case from the jury.
The material facts proved on the part of the plaintiff that relate to the occurrence of the accident, and upon which the court below submitted the case to the jury, are contained in the testimony of the plaintiff herself, and. that of her daughter, who was present at the time and place of the accident, and was a witness at the trial for her mother.
The plaintiff in her testimony states, that she is a widow, fifty years old, living on Eleventh street, northeast; that on the evening of the accident she was on her way home from her country place in Virginia, and that her daughter, then fourteen years of age, met her at the depot; that she had brought with her from the country a basket containing eggs and other articles; that she and her daughter boarded the defendant’s car at Seventh and G streets going east; that the car, which was a combination car, the closed part being in
On cross-examination she stated, that the car was standing when she arose from her seat to get off; that she kept her seat until the car stopped, and got up as soon as it stopped; that she stepped on the running board and looked towards the motorman to see if he handed the basket to her daughter; that as soon as her daughter reached to get the basket the car gave a jerk and she was thrown on her knees; that she is not positive whether the car started or gave a jerk; that she was on the running board a second when the car started or jerked; that her daughter got off the car at the side before witness, and had gotten up to the motorman before the car started; that she saw the motorman pick up the basket and hand it to her daughter, when she was thrown. She further stated on cross-examination, that Mr. Hoover interviewed her on Sunday morning, and that he took everything down in short
The daughter, in her account of the facts attending the occurrence of the accident, gave substantially the same evidence as that given by her mother, according to the statement in the bill of exception. On cross-examination she is very explicit in stating that the car had come to a stop before she got off, and that she got off before her mother attempted to get off, and that it was while her mother was in the act of getting off that the car made a sudden jerk or start.
The evidence produced on the part of the defendant tended to show that there was no fault or negligence on its part that caused the accident; but that the plaintiff attempted to alight from the car before it had come to a stop and while it was in running motion, and in that way was thrown down from the
The plaintiff was a passenger on the defendant’s car, and, as such, was entitled to the highest degree of care and caution on the part of the carrier for her protection against injury. It is true, to make out a prima facie case, the burden of proof of negligence on the part of the defendant, as the cause of the injury, was upon the plaintiff, but this burden is changed, in the case of a passenger, by showing that the accident occurred that caused the injury to the plaintiff, while the latter was a passenger. The burden of proof is then cast upon the defendant to explain the cause of the accident, and to show, if that be the defense, that the plaintiff was negligent and that her negligence caused, or contributed to the production of, the injury. Inland and Seaboard Coasting Co. v. Tolson, 139 U. S. 557. The happening of an accident to a passenger while on or getting off a vehicle, under the control of the carrier, and which, in the usual and ordinary course of things,
These questions of the burden of proof and the presumptions resulting therefrom, have been very fully and clearly considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in, several cases, the last of which being the case of Gleeson v. Va. Midland Railroad Co., 140 U. S. 435;— a case taken up from this District. That was a case where the plaintiff occupied the position of a passenger, and was injured by reason of an obstruction on the road, caused by a landslide, and the defense was that the cause of the injury was the act of God, and not that of the defendant. But the defense did not prevail. In the opinion of the court, delivered by Mr. Justice Lamar, it is said: “ Since the decisions in Stokes v. Saltonstall, 13 Pet. 181, and New Jersey R. & Transp. Co. v. Pollard, 22 Wall. 341, it has been settled law in this court that the happening of an injurious accident is, in passenger cases, prima facie evidence of negligence on the part of the carrier, and that (the passenger being himself in the exercise of due care) the burden then rests upon the carrier to show that its whole duty was performed, and that the injury was unavoidable by human foresight. The rule announced in those cases has received general acceptance; and was followed at the present term in Inland and Seaboard Coasting Co. v. Tolson, 139 U. S. 551.”
In another part of the same opinion, the court said: “ The law is that the plaintiff must show negligence in the defendant. This is done prima facie by showing, if the plaintiff be a passenger, that the accident occurred. If that accident was in fact the result of causes beyond the defendant’s responsibility, or of the act of God, it is still none the less true
In view of these well-settled principles of evidence and the presumptions of facts resulting therefrom, applicable in cases like the present, and the facts shown in proof on the part of the plaintiff, we think the court below was clearly right in refusing the application of the defendant to take the case from the jury. Indeed, the court below, without assuming to itself the right to pass upon the credibility of witnesses, and drawing conclusions of fact from conflicting testimony, could not have done otherwise than submit the case to the jury. The testimony made a case essentially proper for the jury to pass upon and not the court for final determination.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that there were two prayers for instruction granted on the part of the plaintiff and six at the instance of the defendant, but those instructions are not incorporated in the bill of exceptions; but we may well assume that the case was. fully and fairly presented to the jury. The last or eighth of the defendant’s prayers, which was rejected, was calculated to mislead the jury, and was, therefore, properly refused.
There is another- question presented on an exception taken by the defendant, as to the right of the plaintiff to have produced by the claim agent when the latter was being cross-examined as a witness, the original notes taken by the agent upon the interview or examination of the plaintiff the morning after the accident, and from which the statement given in evidence was written out by the agent. The purpose of requiring such notes was to show that the statement read in evidence did not contain a full and accurate statement as made by the plaintiff at the time; the notes being required for purposes of cross-examination of the witness. The signed statement and the notes had both been referred to by the witness in his testimony, and, upon application to the court, he was required to produce his stenographic notes from which, he says, he wrote out the statement signed by the plaintiff. In thus requiring the notes to be produced for cross-examina
There was a question of variance raised in the court below, and an exception taken to the ruling thereon, but there has been no error assigned in respect to such ruling, and we do not understand that the exception is relied upon here. We perceive nothing in the record that could sustain such exception.
Upon the whole, we find no error in the judgment below,, and it must, therefore, be affirmed. Judgment affirmed.
A writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States was prayed and allowed.
The prayer referred to was as follows: “ The jury are instructed that under the evidence in this ease they cannot find any negligence on the part of the conductor of the car, and unless they shall find from the evidence that the motorman was guilty of negligence which caused the accident to plaintiff, they should find for the defendant, and in considering that question they cannot infer the existence of any fact not shown to their satisfaction by the evidence.”— Reporter.